Skip site navigation (1)Skip section navigation (2)
Date:      Wed, 24 Jun 2009 05:15:17 -0400
From:      CmdLnKid <cmdlnkid@gmail.com>
To:        Michael Grant <mg-fbsd3@grant.org>
Cc:        stable@freebsd.org, allnetgroup@yahoo.com
Subject:   Re: Adding multiipul virtual domains?
Message-ID:  <alpine.BSF.2.00.0906240512420.29488@qvzrafvba.5c.ybpny>
In-Reply-To: <62b856460906231221p10ae8d72gbe8cae84063babc5@mail.gmail.com>
References:  <615319.72378.qm@web34307.mail.mud.yahoo.com> <20090623100429.195710th19ude9z4@econet.encontacto.net> <62b856460906231221p10ae8d72gbe8cae84063babc5@mail.gmail.com>

next in thread | previous in thread | raw e-mail | index | archive | help
On Tue, 23 Jun 2009 15:21 -0000, mg-fbsd3 wrote:

> On Tue, Jun 23, 2009 at 17:04, eculp<eculp@encontacto.net> wrote:
>> Quoting ALLnetgroup <allnetgroup@yahoo.com>:
>>
>>> The server has 1 domain  name already setup along with:
>>>
>>> sendmail
>>> Webmin
>>> Apache Web Server
>>> MySQL
>>> Apache Tomcat
>>> Squid Proxy
>>> SOCKS5
>>> PERL
>>> Mod PERL
>>> PHP
>>> OpenSSH
>>> phpBB
>>> RoundCube WebMail
>>>
>>> When I add a new virtual host I would like the host to have it's own
>>> directory, website and the services above.
>
> There is nothing that I know of that will automatically "add a new
> virtual domain" to a machine in all of these systems.  I have my own
> home brew perl scripts which do such things but they are not usable
> outside my own environment.  Many other people I have talked to have
> done the same thing or just configured each of these individually.
>
> If you are not technically savvy enough to write your own
> configuration management system or to modify the configuration files
> individually, you might consider instead of having your own machine to
> use a web hosting company which automatically installs and configures
> this stuff for you via a control panel.
>
> Incidentally this is not the first time I have seen a need for some
> larger "meta" confutation system for unix/linux in general.  It's
> absolutely true that adding a domain to a system is often a multi-step
> process and it need not be.  Like adding a user in the old days when
> you first edited the passwd file, the group file, made the home
> directory and copied over some dot files there, now it's all automated
> in the adduser command.
>
> A user might have several domains, mail, one or more web sites, etc.
> All of this gets configured into lots of different files.  Then think
> what happens when you get rid of a user.  There really aught to be
> some easier way which is why I ended up writing my own scripts.
>
> Michael Grant

Might I suggest ....

http://promote.pairlite.com/direct.pl?pl893

;)

<<End of Thread

-- 

  Sincerely,    -- Jason H.  ;;  Networked Systems Engineering.
    The Command Line Kid.    ;;  Multi-user Systems Advocate.
  mailto:gmail.com!cmdlnkid  ;;  1(616)403-XXXX / BSD Group.

  - (2^(N-1))




Want to link to this message? Use this URL: <https://mail-archive.FreeBSD.org/cgi/mid.cgi?alpine.BSF.2.00.0906240512420.29488>